We believe that God is sovereign, absolute justice, perfect righteousness, divine love, eternal life, omnipotent, omnipresent, omniscient, immutable, and absolute truth.God is the Planner, Redeemer, and Comforting Spirit of all who "believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and are saved."God is the Creator and Sustainer of all the universe.
We believe that the Lord Jesus Christ is the one and only true mediator between God and mankind.
We believe that the only atonement for sin is the shed blood of the Lord Jesus Christ.
We believe that God the Holy Spirit is the comforting, guiding, indwelling Spirit of God in each believer.
We believe that the Bible as recorded in the original languages is the one and only inspired Word of God to mankind.
We believe that the Bible, in the book of Genesis, gives the only credible account of the creation of the universe and of mankind, and according to its record, perfectly created man (Adam and Eve) of his own volition, disobeyed God and fell from fellowship and is now inherently sinful.
We believe that the miraculous account of the Lord Jesus Christ as recorded in the Bible is absolutely true.
We believe that redeemed believers are saved by the grace of God, through faith in Jesus Christ alone, not by any human good works.
We believe that whosoever believes on the Lord Jesus Christ is saved and instantaneously receives eternal life, and whosoever does not believe during this life is condemned already and destined for eternal separation from God and eternal punishment.
We believe that water baptism and the Lord's Supper are prescribed ordinances of the church on earth.
We believe that the second coming of the Lord Jesus Christ will be personal, visible, and premillennial.
We believe that "all scripture is given by inspiration
of God," by which we understand the whole Bible is inspired in the sense
that holy men of God "were moved by the Holy Spirit" to write the
very words of Scripture. We believe that this divine inspiration extends
equally and fully to all parts of the writings - historical, poetical,
doctrinal, and prophetical - as appeared in the original manuscripts. We
believe that all the Scriptures center about the Lord Jesus Christ in His
person and work in His first and second coming, and hence that no portion, even
of the Old Testament, is properly read, or understood, until it leads to Him.
We also believe that all the Scriptures were designed for our practical
instruction. (Mark 12:26,36; 13:11; Luke 24:27,44; John 5:39; Acts 1:16;
17:2-3; 18:28; 26:22-23; 28:23; Rom. 15:4; I Cor. 2:13; 10:11; II Tim. 3:16; II
Peter 1:21)
We believe that the Godhead eternally exists in three
persons - the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit - and that these three are
one God; having precisely the same nature, attributes and perfections, and
worthy of precisely the same homage, confidence, and obedience. (Matt.
28:18-19; Mark 12:29; John 1:14; Acts 5:3-4; II Cor. 13:14; Heb 1:1-3; Rev.
1:4-6)
We believe that God created an innumerable company of
sinless, spiritual beings, known as angels; that one "Lucifer, son of the
morning" - the highest in rank - sinned through pride, thereby becoming
Satan; that a great company of the angels followed him in his moral fall, some
of whom became demons and are active as his agents and associates in the
prosecution of his unholy purposes, while others who fell are "reserved in
everlasting chains under darkness unto the judgment of the great day."
(Isa. 14:12-17; Ezek. 28:11-19; I Tim. 3:6; II Peter 2:4; Jude 1:6)
We believe that Satan is the originator of sin, and that,
under the permission of God, he, through subtlety, led our first parents into
transgression, thereby accomplishing their moral fall and subjecting them and
their posterity to his own power; that he is the enemy of God and the people of
God, opposing and exalting himself above all that is called God of that is worshipped;
and that he who in the beginning said, "I will be like most High," in
his warfare appears as an angel of light, even counterfeiting the works of God
by fostering religious movements and systems of doctrine, which systems in
every case are characterized by a denial of the efficacy of the blood of Christ
and of salvation by grace alone. (Gen. 3:1-19; Rom. 5:12-14; II Cor. 4:3-4;
11:13-15; Eph. 6:10-12; II Thess. 2:4; I Tim. 4:1-3)
We believe that Satan was judged at the cross, though not
then executed and that he, a usurper, now rules as the "god of this
world"; that, at the second coming of Christ, Satan will be bound and cast
into the abyss for a thousand years, and after the thousand years he will be
loosed for a little season and then "cast into the lake of fire and
brimstone," where he "shall be tormented day and night for ever and
ever." (Col. 2:15; Rev. 20:1-3, 10).
We believe that a great company of angels kept their holy
estate and are before the throne of God, from whence they are sent forth as
ministering spirits to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation. (Luke
15:10; Eph. 1:21; Heb. 1:14; Rev. 7:12).
We believe that man was made lower than the angels; and
that, in His incarnation, Christ took for a little time this lower place that
He might lift the believer to His own sphere above the angels. (Heb. 2:6;10)
We believe that man was originally created in the image and
after the likeness of God, ant that he fell through sin, and, as a consequence
of his sin, lost his spiritual life, becoming dead in trespasses and sins, and
that he became subject to the power of the devil. We also believe that this
spiritual death, or total depravity of human nature, has been transmitted to
the entire human race of man, the Man Christ Jesus alone being excepted; and
hence that every child of Adam is born into the world with a nature which not
only possessed no spark of divine life, but is essentially and unchangeably bad
apart from divine grace. (Gen. 1:26; 2:17; 6:5; Ps. 14:1-3, 51:5; Jer. 17:9;
John 3:6; 5:40; 6:53; Rom. 3:10-19; 8:6-7; Eph. 2:1-3; I Tim. 5:6; I John 3:8)
We believe that the dispensations are stewardships by which
God administers His purpose on the earth through man under varying responsibilities.
We believe that the changes in the dispensational dealings of God with man
depend upon changed conditions or situations in which man is successively found
with relation to God, and that these changes are the result of failures of man
and judgments of God. We believe that different administrative responsibilities
of this character are manifest in the Biblical record, that they span the
entire history of mankind, and that each ends in the failure of man under the
respective test and in an ensuing judgment from God. We believe that three of
these dispensations or rules of life are the subject of extended revelation in
the Scripture, viz.: the dispensation of the Mosaic Law, the present
dispensation of grace and the future dispensation of the millennial kingdom. We
believe that these are distinct and are not to be intermingled or confused, as
they are chronologically successive.
We believe that the dispensations are neither ways of
salvation nor different methods of administering the so-called Covenant of
Grace. They are not in themselves dependent on covenant relationships but are
ways of life and responsibility to God which test the submission of man to His
revealed will during a particular time. We believe that, if man does trust in
his own efforts to gain the favor of God or salvation under any dispensational
test, because of the inherent sin his failure to satisfy fully the just
requirements of God is inevitable and his condemnation sure.
We believe that according to the "eternal purpose"
of God (Eph. 3:11)
salvation in the divine reckoning is always "by grace, through
faith," and rests upon the basis of the shed blood of Christ. We believe
that God has always been gracious, regardless of the ruling dispensation, but
that man has not at all times been under an administration or stewardship of
grace as is true in the present dispensation. (I Cor. 9:17; Eph. 3:2, 3:9,
A.S.V.; Col. 1:25; I Tim. 1:4, A.S.V.)
We believe that, as provided and proposed by God and as
preannounced in the prophecies of the Scriptures, the eternal Son of God came
into this world that He might manifest God to men, fulfill prophecy, and become
the Redeemer of a lost world. To this end He was born of the virgin, and
received a human body and a sinless human nature. (Luke 1:30-35; John 1:18; 3:16; Heb. 4:15)
We believe that, on the human side, He became and remained a
perfect man, but sinless throughout His life; yet He retained His absolute
deity, being at the same time very God and very man, and that His earth-life
sometimes functioned within the sphere of that which was human and sometimes
within the sphere of that which was divine. (Luke 2:40; John 1:1-2; Phil.
2:5-8)
We believe that in fulfillment of prophecy He came first to Israel as her
Messiah-King, and that, being rejected of that nation, He, according to the
eternal counsels of God, gave His life as a ransom for all. (John 1:11; Acts
2:22-24; I Tim. 2:6)
We believe that, in infinite love for the lost, He
voluntarily accepted His Father's will and became the divinely provided
sacrificial Lamb and took away the sin of the world; bearing the holy judgments
against sin which the righteousness of God must impose. His death was,
therefore, substitutionary in the most absolute sense - the just for the unjust
- and by His death He became the Savior of the lost. (John 1:29; Rom. 3:25-26; II Cor. 5:14; Heb. 10:5-14; I Peter 3:18)
We believe that, according to the Scriptures, He arose from
the dead in the same body, though glorified, in which He had lived and died,
and that His resurrection body is the pattern of that body which ultimately
will be given to all believers. (John 20:20; Phil. 3:20)
We believe that on departing from the earth, He was accepted
of His Father and that His acceptance is a final assurance to us that His
redeeming work was perfectly accomplished. (Heb. 1:3)
We believe that He became Head over all things to the church
which is His body and in this ministry He ceases not to intercede and advocate
for the saved. (Eph. 1:22-23; Heb. 7:25; I John 2:1)
We believe that, owing to universal death through sin, no
one can enter the kingdom of God unless born again; and that no degree of
reformation however great, no attainments in morality however high, no culture
however attractive, no baptism or other ordinance however administered, can
help the sinner to take even on step toward heaven; but a new nature imparted
from above, a new life implanted by the Holy Spirit through the Word, is
absolutely essential to salvation, and only those thus saved are sons of God.
We believe, also, that our redemption has been accomplished solely by the blood
of our Lord Jesus Christ, who was made to be sin and was made a curse for us,
dying in our room and stead; and that no repentance, no feeling, no faith, no
good resolutions, no sincere efforts, no submission to the rules and
regulations of any church, nor all the churches that have existed since the
days of the Apostles, can add in the very least degree to the value of the
blood, or to the finished work wrought for us by Him who united in His person
true and proper deity with perfect and sinless humanity. (Lev. 17:11; Isa.
64:6; Matt. 26:28; John 3:5,18: Rom. 5:6-9; II Cor. 5:21; Gal. 3:13; 6:15; Eph.
1:7; Phil 3:4-9; Titus 3:5; James 1:18; I Peter 1:18-19,23)
We believe that the new birth of the believer comes only
through faith in Christ and that repentance is a vital part of believing, and
is in no way, in itself, a separate and independent condition of salvation; nor
are any other acts, such as confession, baptism, prayer, or faithful service,
to be added to believing as a condition of salvation. (John 1:12; 3:16,18,36;
5:24; 6:29; Acts 13:39; 16:31; Rom. 1:16-17; 3:22, 26; 4:5; 10:4; Gal. 3:22)
We believe that when an unregenerate person exercises that
faith in Christ which is illustrated and described as such in the New
Testament, he passes immediately our of spiritual death into spiritual life,
and from the old creation into the new, being justified from all things,
accepted before the Father according as Christ His Son is accepted, loved as
Christ is loved, having his place and portion as linked to Him and one with Him
forever. Though the saved one may have occasion to grow in the realization of
his blessings and to know a fuller measure of divine power through the yielding
of his life more fully to God, he is, as soon as he is saved, in possession of
every spiritual blessing and absolutely complete in Christ, and is, therefore,
in no way required by God to seek a so-called "second blessing" or a
"second work of grace." (John 5:24;
17:23; Acts 13:39; Rom. 5:1; I
Cor. 3:21-23; Eph. 1:3; Col. 2:10; I John 4:17; 5:11-12)
We believe that sanctification, which is a setting-apart
unto God, is three- fold: It is already complete for every saved person because
his position toward God is the same as Christ's position. Since the believer is
in Christ, he is set apart unto God in the measure in which Christ is set apart
unto God. We believe, however, that he retains his sin nature, which cannot be
eradicated in that life. Therefore, while the standing of the Christian in
Christ is perfect, his present state is no more perfect than his experience in
daily life. There is, therefore, a progressive sanctification wherein the
Christian is to "grow in grace," and to "be changed" by the
unhindered power of the Spirit. We believe, also, that the child of God will
yet be fully sanctified in his state as he is now sanctified in his standing in
Christ when he shall see his Lord and shall be "like Him." (John
17:17; II Cor. 3:18; 7:1; Eph. 4:24;
5:25-27; I Thess. 5:23;
Heb. 10:10, 14; 12:10)
We believe that, because of the eternal purpose of god
toward the objects of His love, because of His freedom to exercise grace toward
the meritless on the ground of the propitiatory blood of Christ, because of the
very nature of the divine gift of eternal life, because of the present and
unending intercession and advocacy of Christ in heaven, because of the
immutability of the unchangeable covenants of God, because of the
regenerating, abiding presence of the Holy Spirit in the hearts of all who are
saved, we and all true believers everywhere, once saved shall be kept saved
forever. We believe, however, that God is a holy and righteous Father and
that, since He cannot overlook the sin of His children, He will when they
persistently sin chasten them and correct them in infinite love; but having
undertaken to save them and keep them forever, apart from all human merit, He,
who cannot fail, will in the end present every one of them faultless before the
presence of His glory and conformed to the image of His Son. (John 5:24; 10:28; 13:1; 14:16-17;
17:11; Rom. 8:29; I Cor. 6:19; Heb. 7:25; I John
2:1-2; 5:13; Jude 1:24)
We believe it is the privilege, not only of some, but of all
who are born again by the Spirit through faith in Christ as revealed in the
Scriptures, to be assured of their salvation from the very day they take Him to
be their Savior; and that this assurance is not founded upon any fancied
discovery of their own worthiness or fitness, but wholly upon the testimony of
God in His written Word, exciting within His children filial love, gratitude,
and obedience. (Luke 10:20;
21:32; II Cor. 5:1, 6-8;
II Tim. 1:12; Heb. 10:22; I John 5:13)
We believe that the Holy Spirit, the Third Person of the
blessed Trinity, though omnipresent from all eternity, took up His abode in the
world in a special sense on the day of Pentecost according to the divine
promise, dwells in every believer, and by His baptism unites all to Christ in
one body, and that He, as the Indwelling One, is the source of all power and
all acceptable worship and service. We believe that He never takes His
departure from the church, nor from the feeblest of the saints, but is ever
present to testify of Christ; seeking to occupy believers with Him and not with
themselves nor with their experiences. We believe that His abode in the world in
this special sense will cease when Christ comes to receive His own at the
completion of the church. (John 14:16-17; 16:7-15; I Cor. 6:19; Eph. 2:22; II
Thess. 2:7)
We believe that, in this age, certain well-defined
ministries are committed to the Holy Spirit, and that it is the duty of every
Christian to understand them and to be adjusted to them in his own life and
experience. These ministries are: The restraining of evil in the world to the
measure of the divine will; the convicting of the world respecting sin,
righteousness, and judgment; the regenerating of all believers; the indwelling
and anointing of all who are saved; thereby sealing them unto the day of
redemption; the baptizing into one body of Christ of all who are saved and the
continued filling for power, teaching, and service of those among the saved who
are yielded to Him and who are subject to His will. (John 3:6; 16:7-11; Rom.
8:9; I Cor. 12:13; Eph.
4;30; 5;18; II Thess. 2:7; I John 2:20-27)
We believe that some gifts of the Holy Spirit such as
speaking in tongues and miraculous healings were temporary. We believe that
speaking in tongues was never the common or necessary sign of the baptism nor
of the filling of the Spirit, and that the deliverance of the body from
sickness or death awaits the consummation of our salvation in the
resurrection. (Acts 4:8, 31; Rom. 8:23;
I Cor. 13:8)
We believe that all who are united to the risen and ascended
Son of God are members of the church which is the body and bride of Christ,
which began at Pentecost and is completely distinct from Israel. Its
members are constituted as such regardless of membership or nonmembership in
the organized churches of earth. We believe that by the same Spirit all
believers in this age are baptized into, and thus become, one body that is
Christ's, whether Jews or Gentiles, and having become members one of another,
are under solemn duty to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace,
rising above all sectarian differences, and loving one another with a pure
heart fervently. (Matt. 16:16-18; Acts 2:42-47; Rom. 12:5; I Cor. 12:12-27;
Eph. 1:20-23; 4:3-10; Col. 3:14-15)
We believe that water baptism and the Lord's Supper are the
only ordinances of the church and that they are a Scriptural means of testimony
for the church in this age. (Matt. 28:19; Luke 22:19-20; Acts 10:47-48; 16:32-33; 18:7-8; I Cor. 11:26)
We believe that we are called with a holy calling, to walk
not after the flesh, but after the Spirit, and so to live in the power of the
indwelling Spirit that we will not fulfill the lust of the flesh. But the flesh
with its fallen, Adamic nature, which in this life is never eradicated, being
with us to the end of our earthly pilgrimage, needs to be kept by the Spirit
constantly in subjection to Christ, or it will surely manifest its presence in
our lives to the dishonor of our Lord. (Rom. 6:11-13; 8:2, 4, 12-13; Gal. 5:16-23; Eph. 4:22-24; Col.
2:1-10; I Peter 1:14-16; I John 1:4-7; 3:5-9)
We believe that divine, enabling gifts for service are
bestowed by the Spirit upon all who are saved. While there is a diversity of
gifts, each believer is energized by the same Spirit, and each is called to his
own divinely appointed service as the Spirit may will. in the apostolic church
there were certain gifted men - apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors, and
teachers - who were appointed by God for the perfecting of the saints unto
their work of the ministry. We believe also that today some men are especially
called of God to be evangelists, pastors, and teachers, and that it is to the
fulfilling of His will and to His eternal glory that these shall be sustained
and encouraged in their service for God. (Rom 12:6; I Cor. 12:4-11; Eph. 4:11)
We believe that, wholly apart from salvation benefits which
are bestowed equally upon all who believe, rewards are promised according to
the faithfulness of each believer in his service for his Lord, and that these
rewards will be bestowed at the judgment seat of Christ after He comes to
receive His own to Himself. (I Cor. 3:9-15; 9:18-27; II Cor. 5:10)
We believe that it is the explicit message of our Lord Jesus
Christ to those whom He has saved that they are sent forth by Him into the
world even as He was sent forth of His father into the world. We believe that,
after they are saved, they are divinely reckoned to be related to this world as
strangers and pilgrims, ambassadors and witnesses, and that their primary
purpose in life should be to make Christ known to the whole world. (Matt.
28:18-19; Mark 16:15; John 17:18; Acts 1:8; II Cor. 5:18-20; I Peter 1:17; 2:11)
We believe that, according to the Word of God, the next
great event in the fulfillment of prophecy will be the coming of the Lord in
the air to receive to Himself into heaven both His own who are alive and remain
unto His coming, and also all who have fallen asleep in Jesus, and that this
event is the blessed hope set before us in the Scripture, and for this we
should be constantly looking. (John 14:1-3; I Cor. 15:51-52; Phil. 3:20; I
Thess. 4:13-18; Titus 2:11-14)
We believe that the translation of the church will be
followed by the fulfillment of Israel's
seventieth week . (Dan. 9:27; Rev. 6:1 - 19:21) during which the church, the
body of Christ, will be in heaven. The whole period of Israel's
seventieth week will be a time of judgment on the whole earth, at the end of
which the times of the Gentiles will be brought to a close. The latter half of
this period will be the time of Jacob's trouble (Jer. 30:7), which our Lord
called the great tribulation (Matt. 24:15-21). We believe that universal
righteousness will not be realized previous to the second coming of Christ, but
that the world is day by day ripening for judgment and that the age will end
with a fearful apostasy.
We believe that the period of great tribulation in the earth
will be climaxed by the return of the Lord Jesus Christ to the earth as He
went, in person on the clouds of heaven, and with power and great glory to
introduce the millennial age, to bind Satan and place him in the abyss, to lift
the curse which now rests upon the whole creation, to restore Israel to her own
land and to give her the realization of God's covenant promises, and to bring
the whole world to the knowledge of God. (Deut. 30:1-10; Isa. 11:9; Ezek.
37:21-28; Matt. 24:15-25:46; Acts 15:16-17; Rom. 8:19-23; 11:25-27; I Tim.
4:1-3; II Tim. 3:1-5; Rev. 20:1-3)
We believe that at death the spirits and souls of those who
have trusted in the Lord Jesus Christ for salvation pass immediately into His
presence and there remain in conscious bliss until the resurrection of the
glorified body when Christ comes for His own, whereupon soul and body reunited
shall be associated with Him forever in glory; but the spirits and souls of the
unbelieving remain after death conscious of condemnation and in misery until
the final judgment of the great white throne at the close of the millennium,
when soul and body reunited shall be cast into the lake of fire, not to be
annihilated, but to be punished with everlasting destruction from the presence
of the Lord, and from the glory of His power. (Luke 16:19-26; 23:42; II Cor.
5:8; Phil. 1:23; 2 Thess. 1:7-9; Jude 1:6-7; Rev. 20:11-15)